604 ZOOLOGY SECT 



These relationships are expressed in the following diagam : 



Brachyura 



Anomufa 



Macrura 



Arl-hrosfraca 



Mysidacea 

 Anaspidacea 



Stomahopoda 



Euphausiacea 



Phyllocarida 



Cop^epoda 



Cirripedia 



Annulaha 

 FIG. 476. Diagram illustrating the mutual relationships of the orders of Crustacea. 



APPENDIX TO CRUSTACEA. 



Class TRILOBITA. 



The Trilobita are extinct Arthropods peculiar to, and characteristic of, the 

 Palaeozoic rocks : they are specially abundant from the upper Cambrian to the 

 Carboniferous. They are often found in a wonderfully good state of preservation, 

 owing to the hard exoskeleton covering the dorsal surface : the greater part of 

 the ventral region and the appendages were, however, very delicate, and are 

 preserved only in exceptionally favourable cases. 



The body is depressed, more or less oval in outline, and divided into three 

 regions, the head (Fig. 477, c..s7i), the thorax (th), and the abdomen (/>), all of 

 which usually present an elevated median ridge and depressed latei-al portions, 

 whence the trilobation generally characteristic of the group. The head is 



